UFC 11.5 – Ultimate Ultimate 1996

UFC 11.5

UFC HISTORY

UFC 11.5 : The Ultimate Ultimate 2 (also known as Ultimate Ultimate 1996 or UFC 11.5) was a mixed martial arts event held by the Ultimate Fighting Championship on December 7, 1996. The event took place at the Fair Park Arena in Birmingham, Alabama, and was broadcast live on pay-per-view in the United States, and released on home video.

The card featured an eight man tournament with two alternate bouts, and was the UFC’s second “Ultimate Ultimate” tournament, held to find the best of the winners and runners up from past UFC events. This event was the first to introduce the “no grabbing of the fence” rule.

Ken Shamrock appeared as a guest on Late Night with Conan O’Brien on the mainstream network NBC to promote the event, a groundbreaking moment for the young sport of mixed martial arts.

UFC 10 and UFC 11 champion Mark Coleman was originally scheduled to compete in the tournament but was forced to withdraw from the event due to a virus.

The Ultimate Ultimate 1996 also marked the final appearance of UFC Hall of Famer Ken Shamrock before leaving the UFC to go to the World Wrestling Federation. Shamrock would not return to the UFC until 2002 at UFC 40.

The event would also be the last time Don Frye fought in the UFC, as he would also transition into pro wrestling, signing with New Japan Pro Wrestling. Mark Hall, who Frye defeated in the semifinals, would later claim that Don Frye and manager Robert DePersia came into his dressing room during the tournament and convinced him to throw the two fighters’ upcoming semi-final match. Hall says that since Tank Abbott had already advanced to the final after two relatively easy wins, Frye – who’d logged eleven minutes of cage time already that night – wanted to save his energy for the championship match. Because he’d already suffered two defeats to Frye earlier in his career (and therefore probably wasn’t going to win anyway) and DePersia implied that saying no would have a disastrous impact on his future, Hall says he reluctantly agreed to go along with the plot. Frye won by Achilles lock submission in twenty seconds.[1] Referee John McCarthy later wrote in his autobiography Let’s Get It On!:

“

“Unfortunately, this night was the second time I felt I was refereeing a fixed bout. In the semifinals, Don Frye and Mark Hall met in a rematch of their UFC 10 bout. In their first encounter Frye had beaten the piss out of Hall, who’d refused to give up. Here, though, Frye ankle-locked Hall to advance to the finals without breaking a sweat.The fight struck me as odd. Frye, a bread-and-butter wrestler and swing-for-the-fences puncher, had never won a fight by leg lock, and Hall practically fell into the submission. I also knew both fighters were managed by the same guy.”[2]

”

Results[edit]

Finals

Weight class

Method

Round

Time

Notes

N/A

Don Frye

def.

Tank Abbott

Submission (rear-naked choke)

1:22

Semifinals

N/A

Tank Abbott

def.

Steve Nelmark

KO (punch)

1:03

[a]

N/A

Don Frye

def.

Mark Hall

Submission (Achilles lock)

0:20

[b]

Quarterfinals

N/A

Ken Shamrock

def.

Brian Johnston

Submission (forearm choke)

5:48

[c]

N/A

Tank Abbott

def.

Cal Worsham

Submission (punches)

2:51

N/A

Don Frye

def.

Gary Goodridge

Submission (fatigue)

11:19

N/A

Kimo Leopoldo

def.

Paul Varelans

TKO (corner stoppage)

9:08

[d]

Alternate bouts

N/A

Mark Hall

def.

Felix Mitchell

TKO (punches)

1:45

N/A

Steve Nelmark

def.

Marcus Bossett

Submission (choke)

1:37

N/A

Tai Bowden

def.

Jack Nilson

Submission (headbutts)

4:46

Nelmark was an alternate for Ken Shamrock, who could not continue due to an injured hand.

Hall was an alternate for Kimo Leopoldo, who could not continue due to fatigue.

Shamrock was unable to continue in the tournament because of a broken hand he suffered after pinning Johnston up against the cage and unleashing a series of punches.